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Table of Contents: CFP: The Life of Mobile Data Conference Sean Smith <s.a.smith@surrey.ac.uk> 24/7 project in vilnius "raimundas m" <raimay@hotmail.com> DoP Bangalore: Local knowledge: design & innovation John Thackara <john@doorsofperception.com> (by way of Andreas Broeckmann) window installation "=?ISO-8859-1?Q?terror=2Egov=22?= in Los Angeles Oliver Ressler <oliver.ressler@chello.at> PRESS - [R]-[R]-[F] Festival "[R]-[R]-[F]- Festival" <agricola-w@netcologne.de> ATC Monday 7:30pm: Mark Hansen Ken Goldberg <goldberg@ieor.berkeley.edu> "WE INTERRUPT THIS EMPIRE..." (video screenings) "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl> For Nettime, if you feel it is appropriate Douglas Rushkoff <rushkoff@well.com> bootlab berlin > attachment 1 "kobe matthys" <kobe.matthys@agency-computer.com> (by way of pit schultz <pit@ic ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 22 Aug 2003 23:14:01 +0100 From: Sean Smith <s.a.smith@surrey.ac.uk> Subject: CFP: The Life of Mobile Data Conference - --=====================_652014==_.ALT Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed [apologies for cross-posting. please forward to interested parties as appropriate] The Life of Mobile Data: Technology, Mobility and Data Subjectivity April 15 16, 2004 University of Surrey, England The rapid adoption and diffusion of mobile devices over the past decade has transformed the way information is generated, organized and communicated about individuals and their lives. The construction of new mobile data profiles and of mobile, informatic selves, hold the potential to transform what is organizationally and interpersonally meant by privacy, individuality, community, risk, trust, and reciprocity in a mobilizing, and globalizing world. In order to examine these transformations, the RIS:OME project at the University of Surrey is hosting an international, interdisciplinary conference to address emerging social and cultural relations of mobility, privacy, identity, information and communication. This conference will bring together academic, industry and policy researchers and practitioners to critically address how mobile information and communications technologies structure relations of privacy, security, trust, power, identity and difference. There are a number of questions that inform the themes of the conference. In what ways, for example, do mobiles reconfigure the relations of trust, risk, privacy and reciprocity embedded in organizational and interpersonal data sharing? In what ways do mobiles contribute to the construction of identity and of the 'information self'? What is the relationship between mobile data and the individual? Who owns and controls the emerging, individualized mobile data image? What roles do consumption and consumerism play in the social relations of privacy, trust and security? Is the development of mobile technologies associated with emerging relations of risk, uncertainty and privatisation? What social, cultural and regulatory factors have influenced the generation of mobile data in different countries? How do these factors influence culturally specific understandings and practices of globalized and transnational privacy, risk and trust? Are regimes of information sharing and data protection patterned along axes of development and underdevelopment? What roles do national differences and political economies play in the construction of emerging mobile data relations? How are politics reconfigured within and between countries via mobile data technologies and changing mobilities? What critical approaches can be brought to bear on our understanding of diversity, difference and resistance in the generation of mobile data? How can we account for the rapid uptake of mobile devices, and the development of mobile data sharing, both now and in the future? We seek to bring critical perspectives to bear on the development and widespread uptake of mobile technologies and developments in information sharing and data profiling over the last decade. The conference organizers thus invite papers presenting empirically grounded and theoretically informed analyses of the social changes that mobile technologies and their data relations have brought about. Suggested themes could include, but are by no means limited to: - - risk, trust and power in mobile information ownership, control, access and management - - culturally specific patterns of informational trust and privacy - - organizational structuring of mobile information paradigms - - data subjectivity and the construction of identity through mobile technologies - - mobile communications and emerging regulatory environments - - privacy enhancing technologies, their problems, paradoxes and possibilities - - privacy advocacy in the mobile environment - - organizational and interpersonal information sharing - - the lifecycle of mobile personal data: its generation, integration, profiling and mining - - mobile surveillance, security and globalization - - mobile data protection, data subjectivity and knowledge - - information gathering and social memory Papers and panels are invited that address the conference themes. Submission of Abstracts: 500 to 700 words, 31st Oct 2003 Notification of acceptance of papers: 15th Dec 2003 Registration Deadline: 30th Jan 2004 For further information, please contact the conference organizers: Dr Nicola Green <n.green@surrey.ac.uk>, Sean Smith <s.a.smith@surrey.ac.uk>. With the support of Intel Corporation, and the Department of Sociology at the University of Surrey. Paper length: 20 minutes. Panel presentations encouraged. _________________________________ Dr. Sean Smith Research Fellow, Mobile Technologies, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey. ph: +44 (0)1483 686 966 m: +44 (0)7786 511 042 - --=====================_652014==_.ALT ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 25 Aug 2003 01:28:38 +0200 From: "raimundas m" <raimay@hotmail.com> Subject: 24/7 project in vilnius 24/7: Wilno - Nueva York Project dates: September 12 - November 2, 2003 Venue: Contemporary Art Centre, Vilnius www.cac.lt A journey through shortcuts and detours of translocal living via creative resistance : individual survival techniques : sustainable communities : transcultural drifts : intergalactic links : synchronicities : street: unreal time : speed of light : remote collaborations : floating places : self-publishing : identities in flux : LIST OF PARTICIPANTS (as for 22 08 03): Live: situations, performances, transmissions, seminars by 16 Beaver Street Group, Kate Armstrong, Otto Berchem, Bik Van der Pol, Daniel Bozhkov, Bureau of Inverse Technology, Phil Collins, Jose Cruz, Rainer Ganahl, Hope Ginsburg, Natalie Jeremijenko, Matthew Keegan, Jouke Kleerebezem, Will Kwan, Matthieu Laurette, M&M Proyectos, Darius Miksys, Jesus Cruz Negron, Parlour Projects, Arturas Raila, Martha Rosler, Beatriz Santiago, Tino Sehgal, Chemi Rosado Seijo, Hanno Soans, Temporary Services, Valie Export Society Screens and projections by Sonia Abian, Derrick Adams, Jennifer Allora & Guillermo Calzadilla, Sven Augustijnen, Anita Di Bianco, Pierre Bismuth, Michael Blum, Francois Bucher, Karin Campbell, Forcefield with Happy Banana, Johan Grimonprez, Leon Grodski, Arunas Gudaitis, Tehching Hsieh, Emily Jacir, Paul Ramirez Jonas, Isaac Julien, Jesal Kapadia, M&M Proyectos, Gintaras Makarevicius, Dave McKenzie, Jonas Mekas, John Menick, Aleksandra Mir, Muntadas, Laurel Nakadate, Hayley Newman, Jeanine Oleson, Laura Parnes, Jenny Perlin, Cesare Pietroiusti, Adrian Piper, Radical Software Group, Reverend Billy, Emily Roysdon, Eran Schaerf & Eva Meyer, Wael Shawky, Sean Snyder, Javier Tellez, Tepeyac, Valerie Tevere, Alex Villar, Andy Warhol Documents, installations, databases by Rich Aldrich, Brian Bellot, Melissa Brown, Yane Calovski, Mariana Deball, Stephanie Diamond, Gardar Eide Einarsson, Patrick Killoran, Jeroen Kooijmans, Dainius Liskevicius, Jonathan Monk, Nomads & Residents, Michael Rakowitz, Lisi Raskin, Karin Sander, Igor Savchenko, Trebor Scholz, Alma Skersyte, Sandra Straukaite, Mario Garcia Torres, Oscar Tuazon, Roger Welch, Judi Werthein, Inga Zimprich, Carey Young, etc. Curators: Kestutis Kuizinas and Raimundas Malasauskas SOME NOTES FOR THE DRIFTING CONCEPT: The program (or vision) of the project is under a constant upgrade which is open. There is a hope that it will remain as such after the actual 24/7 exhibition at the CAC Vilnius is technically over. The following bits and pieces from the flow ideas are just multiple arrival/departure points to start or keep the conversation going. The project is conceived as an interface for different orders, rules and frameworks to interact together, drifting across the subjects with no central theme or principle attached. Yet all the concerns involved in the project are life-minded. There is never enough of diversity. Your comments or remixes of the concept are more than welcome. 24 / 7 Twenty hours seven days a week: this is the way the grocery store or the surveillance camera on the corner of the street works, this is how life sustaining (-ed) art practice functions in order to keep the survival. This is how the 24/7 project is intended to develop: to interact with myriads of flows and actions happening simultaneously, a continuous inventions of new ways of living and difference-friendly environments, rapid merge of identities and constant struggle which introduces new mutations in the urban evolution ( things that happen all the time, but are noticed occasionally.) 24/7: Vilnius is intended to immerse into reality and leave traces which could perhaps be identified only later. Or to put it into other words this is where the linking effort focused: Individual and collective techniques and strategies of living / survival / resistance to the power structures; Art as a tool of: learning, communicating, experiencing, living; Communal activities and ways of living / creating together via hi-tech technologies as well as low-key actions; Chance and programmed encounters / confrontations; Artist as a self-media outside of academic and institutional legitimations; Mapping the invisible flows of exchanges and objects; Simultaneities, synchronicities and complexities; Customised strategies and devices to inhabit public space; 25th HOUR The notion of hours and days in a loop implies the 25th hour: as an escape, fold, TAZ and break up from the loop www.nqpaofu.com/2003/nqpaofu71.html. AMSTERDAM ³The tourist industry is changing the real and imagined city and forms of urban life to fit it needs. Even if you go to real places, there are people who are reproducing packaged experiences for the visitor. Do the real Amsterdam experience! All in one place! And it doesn¹t even have to be in Amsterdam!² (Edward Soja) Exactly, these slips have taken place even in books already: the title of the new book by Adam Phillips is Prague, yet its plot develops in Budapest. 24/7: Vilnius takes place in Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania. "Wilno" is the way of referring to the city in Polish and Jiddish language, as well as "Nueva York" is New York for Spanish speaking community. Thus the loop of 24/7 is broken again, mixing up asynchronic temporalities together with the perspectives of ethnic minorities. NEW YORK CITY This was the starting point of the project to show the contemporary art scene of New York City in Vilnius. However following Edvar Soja¹s example of Amsterdam with a global migration in mind makes us to think that one can be a part of NYC art scene even without ever encountering USA immigration office. On the other hand being a part of New York art scene does not mean that one is a part of the local art market. But let¹s consider these are nuances. Besides 200 languages being spoken here and the extremes of life NYC is still the main meeting point, media capital and the most loaded networking tool in the world. That¹s how we decided to approach it. Drifting across NYC, traveling via customized channels of communication, entering various networks and communities here, and exiting hem somewhere else, maybe another part of the world. It is as if you take E train which runs on the D track and takes a route of F train in NYC underground. There are many points of transfer and entering another story or a zone. To put it in other words this is where the linking effort is focused: Street life; Remote collaborations; connecting as an artistic practice; ³Communicative and informational drift² (Jouke Klereebezem); hijacking the media, alternative and parallel ways of communication; Self-publishing: weblog culture; Transcultural slips and rides; Fluid identities and transpersonal realities, Recycling and remixing culture; VILNIUS City on the slip or city in sleep? Vilnius is going to accommodate the 24/7 project in September November 2003. The name of the city in Lithuanian language refers to notion of the wave, yet Neris river didn¹t reach the scale of Pearl River, so it could feed the mega urban zones. The capital of one of the former Soviet Union republics Vilnius is an open field for the liberal democracy to interact with the heritage of Communist planning. Yet before the major investments of global capital has reached the city, a bronze monument for anarchomposer Frank Zappa stood up in one of the squares as a homage for anarchy which never sleeps. 24/7 is intended to intensify and densify the diversity of information in Vilnius, however it is not about Vilnius New York exchange: the two cities are just two points of transfer. The project as a linking and networking field 24/7: Vilnius is inspired by a field logic of sharing and self-regulating: some of artists groups and initiatives are invited to develop their own program in the project thus creating interzones where transparent neighborhoods coexist without borders. KEYWORDS that could have been above (to be continued): WAR, excess of information, open source, creative life, drifting concept, counterculture, nomadism, stock exchange, night shift, subculture, illegal aliens, terrorism, hip-hop, transexuals, surveillance systems, utopia, homeless, unemployed, etc. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 27 Aug 2003 14:37:20 +0200 From: John Thackara <john@doorsofperception.com> (by way of Andreas Broeckmann) Subject: DoP Bangalore: Local knowledge: design & innovation 26 August 2003 For immediate release: Doors of Perception in Bangalore Doors of Perception announces a "working party" in Bangalore, India, on 11 and 12 December, to celebrate its tenth birthday. DoorsEast 2003 is a cluster of events on the theme: "Local knowledge: design and innovation of tomorrow's services". The main event is a two-day international encounter - part conference, part open space workshop - on 11 and 12 December. It will address the question: "how do we design new services, enabled by ICT, that are based on local knowledge, and use local content?" DoorsEast features case studiesof location based information (GIS / GPS), WiFi networks, tools and methodologies for mapping local knowledge, and other new ways to design for mobility, geography, and access. Doors' partners in the event are the Centre for Knowledge Societies (CKS) and the National Institute of Design, in India; and Interaction Design Institute Ivrea, and Nokia, in Europe. Presenters and participants include: grassroots innovators from India and South Asia; designers of future service scenarios from MediaLab, Interaction Design Institute Ivrea, and others; Jussi Angesleva, the winner of Open Doors in 2002; Webby Award winner Marcel van der Drift; Derrick de Kerckhove, McCluhan Program director; Darlie O Koshy, Director, National Institute of Design in India; Open Doors peoples' choice Live|Work, from London; Ezio Manzini, Milan Polytechnic University; philosopher Patricia de Maertelare; e-democracy expert Bert Mulder; future services designers from Nokia; Jogi Panghaal, DoorsEast; Aditya Dev Sood, Center for Knowledge Societies, Bangalore; Marco Susani, Motorola; and symposiarch John Thackara, Doors of Perception. John Thackara commented: "The first major industry, textiles, owed a great deal to the transfer of knowledge from India. Our focus in design is now shifting its focus from things, to systems, and there are many new ways we can learn from South Asian thought". http://www.doorseast.org/ http://www.doorsofperception.com/ ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 27 Aug 2003 18:08:06 +0200 From: Oliver Ressler <oliver.ressler@chello.at> Subject: window installation "=?ISO-8859-1?Q?terror=2Egov=22?= in Los Angeles This is a multi-part message in MIME format. - --------------090503020906020801030105 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit BOOM! window installation "terror.gov" by Oliver Ressler & David Thorne at Gallery 825/LAAA, Los Angeles 825 N. La Cienega Blvd. September 2 - 26, 2003 "Boom!" is a collaborative project of Oliver Ressler (Vienna, Austria) and David Thorne (Los Angeles, USA). The project consists of photo-text works in various media designed for flexible production and application in a range of display contexts. The project began as a series of banners for use in counter-globalization protests, and has also been displayed in art institutions and as "public art." The works in the series to date inject full-length statements into the traditionally short linguistic structure of the "url" to generate dysfunctional web addresses which examine the central contradictions of globalized capitalism. These urls evoke the recent economic boom as a persistent and spectral manifestation of the deepening crises of globalized capitalism, and suggest that "boom" should be understood not only as "expansion" (capital in search of return) but also as potential collapse or implosion. The piece "terror.gov" was realized as an issue-specific intervention for a window installation at Gallery 825 in Los Angeles within the ongoing project "Boom!". "terror.gov" focuses on a present moment in the USA that could be called a "state of exception," a moment in which a discourse of terror seeks to foreclose - or suspend - certain kinds of political articulation, space and thought. Materially, this state of exception takes the form of directives, policies, and legislation which grant broad powers to the executive and the judiciary, and to intelligence, law enforcement, and other security apparatuses. In another sense, the state of exception has the effect of making contestatory modes of political engagement extremely difficult, since the discourse of terror relies on a rhetoric of potentiality or possibility (the potential of the unknown or the unpredictable, the possibility of future terrorist acts) in order to justify repressive measures and reciprocal acts of terror. In the name of security, "anything goes," and opposition to such measures is considered a kind of treachery. "terror.gov" suggests thinking toward a space of potentiality, or possibility, that is not always only the possibility of terror, from whatever source. The url text of the piece reads (without spaces): www. if only people would stay locked into the threat matrix and never stop to consider the fact that the scenario in which terror is met with terror on every front is dangerously and some might say deliriously circular then they would be immediately forthcoming with every penny necessary to sustain the burn rate for ongoing military and economic operations which secure a comfortable living for a select few and condemn everyone else to oblivion while still managing to convince them of the promise that such a comfortable life could one day be theirs even though they should simply be happy that at least there is more than enough terror to go around .gov Another new work of "Boom!" will be realized in 2003 within the upcoming exhibition "Reassessing urban space: Conventions, regulations, and counter-movements in social urban space", Dunkers Kulturhus, Helsingborg, Sweden Further information: http://www.ressler.at ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 25 Aug 2003 13:03:50 +0200 From: "[R]-[R]-[F]- Festival" <agricola-w@netcologne.de> Subject: PRESS - [R]-[R]-[F] Festival [R]-[R]-[F] Festival - Version 1.0 www.newmediafest.org/rrf/ 1. review from 20 August 2003 on NEURAL.it www.neural.it http://www.neural.it/nnews/rrf.htm 2. Feature on Blogwork of ASAC of 50th Venice Biennale http://www.labiennale.org/blogwork ***************************************** [R]-[R]-[F] Festival - Version 1.0 is currently participating in InteractivA '03 - Biennale for New Media Art www.cartodigital.org/interactiva at Museum of Contemporary Art Merida (Yucatan/Mexico) www.macay.org 11 July - 28 September 2003 >>>>>> Short introduction >>>>>> >From its structures, [R] - [R] - [F] - Festival is an experimental New Media art project in form of an online festival created, programmed and realized by Agricola de Cologne. Its central subject, abbreviated in the capital letters of the title, is "Remembering, Repressing, Forgetting". A new way of art working is practiced: networking as artworking. Experimental fields of memory are developed by inviting curators from different countries around the globe, eg directors of media festivals or curators specialized in New Media, who have to select a number of artists of their choice according the terms of the project. The dynamic of this ongoing and continously changing project, as it is set up for being presented in festivals and media exhibitions, manifests itself not only in the artistic online environment, especially created for [R] - [R] - [F] - Festival, but also progressing when for each new presentation a new project version is created, including new subject related aspects, new curators and new artists and new visualizations of the connected memory fields. Continuously expanding, these memory fields containing curators and artists of the previous project versions will be always present in the background while slowly a networking universe of collective memory comes up. The project uses the Internet not only as an artistic environment, but primarily also as a communicating medium and a data base which is closely connected to memory and loss of memory. ************************* [R]-[R]-[F] Festival - Version 1.0 www.newmediafest.org/rrf/ is the festival environment of A Virtual Memorial - Memorial project against the Forgetting and for Humanity www.a-virtual-memorial.org and corporate member of [NewMediaArtProjectNetwork] :||cologne ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 22 Aug 2003 10:08:57 -0400 (EDT) From: Ken Goldberg <goldberg@ieor.berkeley.edu> Subject: ATC Monday 7:30pm: Mark Hansen ATC@UCB: Listening Post: Rendering the evolving landscape of online public discourse (or, a statistician, an artist and 200,000 complete strangers) Mark Hansen UCLA, Dept of Statistics The Art, Technology, and Culture Colloquium Mon, 25 August, 7:30-9:30pm: UC Berkeley, Location: 160 Kroeber Hall All ATC Lectures are free and open to the public. Listening Post, a collaboration between Hansen and NY artist Ben Rubin, is an award winning multimedia art installation designed to convey the magnitude and diversity of online communication. Exhibited at the Whitney Museum of American Art, December 2002 through March 2003, Listening Post provides a meaningful rendering of a massive data stream consisting of thousands of simultaneous Internet-based conversations. The visual centerpiece of Listening Post is a suspended, curved grid of more than two hundred small screens. These screens display fragments of text that are continuously gathered in real time from unrestricted Internet chat rooms, bulletin boards and other forums. The work is structured as a sequence of "scenes," each of which organizes incoming communications according to different statistical criteria. Mirroring the fluidity and dynamism of the Internet itself, topics emerge and change from day to day, hour to hour. A coordinated audio component underscores the content presented on the screens, layering algorithmically generated musical compositions with the vocalization of captured messages, spoken by a text-to-speech system. The technical challenges implied here are considerable; from "frugal" monitoring agents that continually recognize and cull new content, to statistical natural language processing and dynamic clustering schemes that allow us to track topics and extract representative phrases. In this talk, I will describe how our work has evolved, starting with our early experiments with pure sonification of Web traffic. Hansen will emphasize the interplay between data analysis and design, between modeling and expression and end with their most recent project, a public art commission involving a live data feed from Google's news service. - -- Mark Hansen is currently Associate Professor of Statistics at UCLA, where he also has an appointment in the Design|Media Art Department. Previously he was a member of the Technical Staff in the Statistics and Data Mining Research Department of Bell Laboratories. Mark will give a related talk in the Neyman Seminar in Berkeley's Statistics Department on Wednesday August 27, 4-5pm, in 1011 Evans. http://www.stat.ucla.edu/~cocteau http://www.earstudio.com/projects/listeningpost.html ********************************************************************** The ATC Colloquium continues our partnership with the Berkeley Art Museum to present online video of ATC talks, available both in QuickTime (highlights) or MP3 audio. For links and the full 2003-2004 series schedule, please see: http://www.ieor.berkeley.edu/~goldberg/lecs/ ********************************************************************** ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 25 Aug 2003 15:23:24 +1000 From: "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl> Subject: "WE INTERRUPT THIS EMPIRE..." (video screenings) From: "a. mark liiv" <mark@whisperedmedia.org> The most talked about anti-war documentary returns to play 4 consecutive screenings in the Bay Area: "WE INTERRUPT THIS EMPIRE..." will be playing: Saturday, August 23rd at 7pm - Admission $5 AK Press 674-A 23rd St, Oakland Tuesday, August 26th at 9:15pm - Admission $5 The Parkway Theater 1934 Park Blvd, Oakland Thursday, August 28th at 6pm, 8pm, 9:45pm - Admission $8 The Roxie Cinema 3117 16th Street, San Francisco (6pm show possible benefit for Food First and the Campesino efforts in Cancun. ... and various speakers attending ... stay tuned to www.videoactivism.org for details) Saturday, Sept. 6th at 8:30pm with OtherCinema Artist's Television Access 992 Valencia Street (at 21st) www.othercinema.com ***************************************************** What happens when a trigger-happy cowboy with a pocket full of loot aims his guns on an oil-rich, people-poor nation? The San Francisco Video Activist Network presents the story you won't see on Fox News: an eye-popping, jaw-dropping look at the Bay Area's radical resisitance to an illegal war. "We Interrupt This Empire..." is a collaborative work by many of the Bay Area's independent video activists which documents the direct actions that shut down the financial district of San Francisco in the weeks following the United States' invasion of Iraq. With the audio backdrop including the live broadcasts of Enemy Combatant Radio from the SF Independent Media Center to SFPD's tactical communications that were picked up by police scanners, the documentary takes a look at the diverse show of resistance from the streets of San Francisco as well as providing a critique of the coporate media coverage of the war and exploring such issues as the Military Industrial Complex, attacks on civil liberties, and the United States' current imperialist drive. For more information: http://videoactivism.org/empire.html and stay tune for our soon to be announced European tour including presentations at N5M4 festival: www.n5m.org in the Netherlands. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 26 Aug 2003 18:14:08 -0400 From: Douglas Rushkoff <rushkoff@well.com> Subject: For Nettime, if you feel it is appropriate The 5th Anniversary of the Media Ecology Association A Celebration Guest of Honor: Neil Postman 7:30-10:00 PM on September 4th, 2003 at Fordham University's Lincoln Center Campus 113 West 60th Street, corner of Columbus Avenue Leo Lowenstein Hall, 12th Floor Open to the Public Moderated by Lance Strate, Fordham University I. In Memory of Walter J. Ong, SJ II. From God's Word to Holy War A Panel Discussion on Media and Religion Douglas Rushkoff, New York University Eric McLuhan, University of Toronto Paul Levinson, Fordham University Ray Smith, Iona College Cheryl Anne Casey, Sacred Heart University Read Mercer Schuchardt, Marymount Manhattan College III. "And Now This: A Media Ecology Video" by Margot Hardenbergh, Fordham University and Michael Grabowski, College of New Rochelle IV. Honoring Neil Postman: A Special Presentation V. Reception ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 27 Aug 2003 18:11:59 +0200 From: "kobe matthys" <kobe.matthys@agency-computer.com> (by way of pit schultz <pit@icf.de>) Subject: bootlab berlin > attachment 1 Attachment xxxxxxxxxx Attachment 1 Sonntag, 31. August, ab 18.00 / Sunday, August 31, at 6PM Bootlab, Raum 3, Ziegelstr. 20, 10117 Berlin - -18h. La Borde: Nicolas Philibert 'La moindre des choses' 1996, 105 min (Französisch/french) - -19.30h. Kingsley Hall: Luke Fowler 'What You See Is Where You’re At' 2001, 30min (Englisch/english) - - 20.00 SPK (Sozialistischen Patienten Kollektiv): SPK-Video 1997, 33 min, (English/english) - -21.00h Irren-Offensive, Berlin: "The Verdict of the Foucault Tribunal" von Hagai Aviel ,1998 (Deutsch/german). - -21.30h Weglaufhaus: 'Fluchtpunkt: Wirklichkeit' von Christina Mast, 1999 (Deutsch/german) organisiert von / organised by Ariane Beyn und Kobe Matthys ============================================================================== Attachment #D# "Attachment" (Anhang, Anfügung, Anlagerung, Anschluß, Bindung, Beschlagnahmung, Beiwerk...) ist der Titel einer Veranstaltungsreihe im Raum3, die der Dynamik und Qualität von selbst-organisierter Wissensaneignung nachspüren will. Geplant sind Treffen mit verschiedenen Initiativen und Selbst-Hilfe Gruppen, die jeweils eine alltägliche, praktische Fragestellung verfolgen. Durch ähnliche Fragen bewegt zu sein, kann Menschen zur gemeinsamen Lösungssuche stimulieren und dabei unterschiedliche Erfahrungen, Bedürfnisse und Blickpunkte zum Einsatz kommen lassen. So gelingt es Gruppen, die aus praktischer Problem-Lösungs-Hilfe heraus entstehen, ein auf ihren Erfahrungen basierendes Wissen zu begründen, das die Kapazitäten des "Nutzers" zur Selbst-Hilfe bestärkt. Aus den gewonnenen Kenntnissen ergeben sich breiter gefächerte, neue Handlungs-Möglichkeiten und unabhängige Kommunikationsprozesse. Die Veranstaltungsreihe "attachment" unternimmt den Versuch, über das Andocken an eine Fragestellung weitere Fragenfelder ins Blickfeld zu rücken. Gleichzeitig soll ein Austausch über die vielfältigen Strategien, Wissen zu konstituieren, eröffnet werden. Die geplanten Treffen möchten zu einer (Selbst-)Betrachtung der unterschiedlichen Weisen, einer Fragestellung "verbunden" zu sein, anregen. (So wie die Mitglieder des Bootlab beispielsweise die Nutzung von Computern betreffende Fragen verbinden.) Mit dem Begriff "attachment" soll die Entstehung von befähigendem Wissen im Verhältnis zu Anlaß und treibender Kraft der Aktivitäten einer Gruppe untersucht werden. #ENG# "Attachment" is a series of encounters with groups that are attached to a common practical question. Being attached to the same question triggers self-organizing processes of communication. People affected by a common problem are set into motion to solve this problem together, bringing into play their different backgrounds and points of view. Groups that emerge out of practical problem-solving support constitute empowering knowledges based on experiences. Those empowering knowledges strengthen the user's capacities for self-help, while their newly gained awareness opens up new opportunities for action. This series is an attempt to get attached through the act of "being attached". It is a way of exchanging experiences among various groups on the different possibilities of constituting empowering knowledges. The "attachment"-meetings encourage to (self-)reflect on the different types of attachments of singular groups. In Bootlab for example people are attached to questions related to the use of computers. By exploring 'attachments' we take a closer look at the articulation of empowering knowledge in relation to the source of a group‘s action. ============================================================================= Attachment 1 #D# Seit den 50er Jahre haben auf Selbst-Hilfe ausgerichtete Initiativen das öffentliche, institutionelle psychiatrische Hilfeangebot für sogenannte "Geisteskranke" herausgefordert. Ausgehend von bekannten Beispielen alternativer Psychiatrien der 50/60/70er Jahre und von zwei aktuellen Berliner Projekten soll die (Erfolgs?)Geschichte solcher Versuche nachgezeichnet werden. #ENG# Groups attached to the question of 'mental health'-care challenge traditional psychiatric approaches of 'mental health'. We invite people from two groups in Berlin 'IrrenOffensive' and 'Weglaufhaus' and confront these with initiatives in Paris 'La Borde', London 'Kingsley Hall' and Heidelberg 'SPK'. ============================================================================== la Borde #D# Die Clinique de la Borde in Cour-Cherverny, etwas südlich von Paris, wurde 1953 von dem Psychiater Jean Oury gegründet. Ourys Methode institutioneller Psychiatrie setzt bei der Aufhebung der formalen Unterscheidung zwischen Patient und Mitarbeitern an. Die Bewohner können sich in der Einrichtung frei bewegen und beteiligen sich aktiv an der Instandhaltung des laufenden Betriebs der Klinik. Ab 1955 arbeitete Felix Guattari gemeinsam mit Oury in La Borde. Guattari betrieb dort die Recherchen für sein und G. Deleuzes Konzept der "Schizoanalyse". In "La moindre des choses" verfolgt der Dokumentarfilmer Nicolas Philibert die Hochs und Tiefs während der Proben zu einer Theateraufführung der Mitarbeiter und Bewohner von La Borde im Sommer 1995. Aufgeführt wird Witold Gombrowiczs absurder Bühnentext "Operetta" (1966) über die Geschichte und Revolutionen des 20. Jahrhunderts. Entlang der Vorbereitung zu diesem Ereignis zeigt der Film das Leben in La Borde, die tägliche Routine, scheinbar nebensächliche Details, die Einsamkeit und die Erschöpfung, Momente allgemeiner Heiterkeit und die besondere Aufmerksamkeit, die sich die Bewohner von La Borde gegenseitig schenken. #ENG# La clinique de la Borde in Cour-Cheverny, South of Paris, was founded in 1953 by the psychiatrist Jean Oury. La Borde proposes a new method of "institutional psychiatry" with annuling the formal distinction between patient and staff. Not only are the residents free to move in the facility, they actively participate in running it. From 1955 on Felix Guattari collaborated with Oury at La Borde and researched on his and G. Deleuzes concept of "schizoanalysis". In 'La moindre des choses' filmmaker Nicolas Philibert follows the ups and downs of the rehearsals of a theatre performance by staff-members and residents of La Borde in summer 1995. They are putting on stage Witold Gombrowicz's grotesque dramatic text "Operetta" (1966) on the history and revolutions of the 20th century. Along the preparation of the event the film describes life at La Borde, the daily routine, seemingly insignificant details, the loneliness and the fatigue, as well as moments of collective merriment and the extreme attention all devote to one another. ============================================================================== Kingsley Hall #D# Kingsley Hall: In ihrem berühmten Buch 'Sanity, Madness and the Family' (1964) führen Robert Laing und Aaron Esterson klinische Beweise dafür an, dass einige Formen der Schizophrenie durch mangelnde Kommunikation innerhalb des Systems Familie verursacht werden können. Das konventionelle "Psychiater-Patient" Verhältnis habe versäumt, die sozialen Lebensumstände des Patienten in Betracht zu ziehen. 1965 gründeten Laing und eine Gruppe von 20 psychiatrischen Patienten eine therapeutische Hausgemeinschaft, den Kingsley Hall Therapeutic Center, in Londons East End. Das fünf Jahre dauernde Projekt wird fälschlicherweise oft mit LSD-Therapie in Verbindung gebracht. Laing gilt heute als einer der Begründer der Anti-Psychatrie Bewegung - ein Begriff, den Laing zeitlebens ablehnte. 'What You See Is Where You’re At' (2001) von dem schottischen Künstler Luke Fowler ist eine Kollage von historischem Filmmaterial aus dem R.D. Laing Archiv der Glasgow University und aktuellen Interviews mit ehemaligen Bewohnern von Kingsley Hall. #ENG# Kingsley Hall: With their book 'Sanity, Madness and the Family' (1964) Robert Laing and Aaron Esterson provided clinical evidence that some schizophrenia was caused by communication breakdown within the family system. They argued that the 'psychiatrist-patient' relationship failed to consider the 'patients' life-in-context. In 1965 Laing and a group of 20 psychiatric patients initiated a therapeutic community household, the Kingsley Hall Therapeutic Center in the East End of London - a clinical space within which people could overcome psychotic breakdowns in a non-institutional context. The five-year project is today wrongly connected with LSD Therapy, while Laing is considered one of the founders of the anti-psychiatric movement. He was especially opposed to the use of lobotomies, electro-shock therapy and the dehumanizing effects of incarceration in psychiatric hospitals. Scottish artist Luke Fowler's 'What You See Is Where You’re At' is a collage of found footage from the Glasgow University R.D. Laing archive and interviews with former residents. Fowler provides an inside-view of life at Kingsley Hall Center. =========================================================================== SPK #D# SPK (Das Sozialistische Patientenkollektiv) : 1965 von Dr. Wolfgang Huber von der Psychiatrischen Universitätsklinik Heidelberg initiiert. 1970 trat das Kollektiv mit der ersten Patientenvollversammlung der Welt "pro Krankheit" öffentlich als Sozialitisches Patientenkollektiv hervor und stellte alles Bestehende in Frage, nicht zuletzt auc die Zustände in der Psychiatrischen Poliklinik selbst. Nach Hungerstreiks, Besetzungen von Dienstzimmern und des Rektorats, zahllosen Go-Ins, Sit-Ins und Teach-Ins ergingen Morddrohungen, auch gegen Huber. Jean-Paul Sartre war "außerordentlich beeindruckt". Der deutsche "Staatsschutz" war anderer Meinung. Fest steht: In den gerade mal 17 Monaten seiner umkämpften Existenz radikalisierte sich das antipsychiatrisch-revolutionäre Kollektiv bis hin zur Bewaffnung, und nach seinem Ende schlossen sich über ein Dutzend seiner Mitglieder dem bewaffneten Kampf der "RAF" an, der in den folgenden Jahren die Republik erschüttern sollte. Das SPK-Video (1997) von KRANKHEIT IM RECHT / SPK führt die SPK-Aktionen in Heidelberg in den 70er Jahren ein: in der psychiatrischen Poliklinik, in der die Patienten Anfang 1970 die erste arztfreie Patientenvollversammlung der Welt abhielten, das Verwaltungs-Direktionsgebäude der klinischen Universitäts-Anstalten, in dem der Hungerstreik der Patienten Ende Februar 1970 stattfand, das Universitätsrektorat, das von den SPK-Patienten im Juli 1970 besetzt wurde usw. #ENG# SPK (Das Sozialistische Patientenkollektiv): initiated in 1965 by Dr. Wolfgang Huber of the Psychiatric University Clinic of Heidelberg. In 1970 the socialistic patients collective went public with the first patients "pro illness" plenary meeting in the world. It questioned everything, also the conditions in the policlinic. After hungerstrikes, occupations of the director's office, numerous Go-Ins, Sit-Ins and Teach-Ins threats on Huber's life. Unlike the German Police, Jean-Paul Satre was "very impressed". In the 17 months of its existence the collective got radical up to the point of getting armed. After the end of the collective over a dozen of its members joint the RAF. The SPK-video (1997), published by KRANKHEIT IM RECHT /SPK introduces the SPK's actions in Heidelberg in the 70ties: in the Psychiatric Polyclinic, where the SPK patients held their first general assembly of patients and a patients' congress, a self-organized plenum of patients; the administration building of the university clinics, where the first hunger strike of the patients took place at the end of February 1970; the office of the rector of Heidelberg University, which was occupied by SPK patients in July 1970 etc. ============================================================================= Irren-Offensive #D# "Irren-Offensive: Die Irren-Offensive e. V. (IO) 1980 gegründet und erste selbstbestimmte und antipsychiatrische Initiative ehemaliger Psychiatrie-Insassen. Das Psychiatrie-Beschwerdezentrum e. V. ein Verein der Beratungen anbietet und Beschwerden aufnimmt. Es werden Rechtsanwälte vermittelt. Diesen Begegnungsort benennen wir nach Werner Fuß, einem bedeutenden Mitbegründer der Irren-Offensive. Werner wurde erst in seinem 34 Lebensjahr erlaubt, sich aus der Bevormundung zu befreien. Er nannte sich selber "der Ausbrecherkönig der Psychiatrien" und war Gründungsmitglied der Irren-Offensive. "The Verdict of the Foucault Tribunal" (1998), von Hagai Aviel, Vorsitzender des Isreali Association Against Psychiatric Assault. Die Irren-Offensive ist Mit-Organisator des Foucault-Tribunal, gemeinsam mit der Freien Universität Berlin und der Volksbühne Berlin, wo das viertägige Seminar zum aktuellen Stand der Psychiatrie 1998 stattfand. Ankläger waren u.a. Thomas S. Szasz, Gerburg Treusch-Dieter, Wolf-Dieter Narr. #ENG# "Irren-Offensive: (nuts-offensive) was founded in 1980 as the first self-determined and anti-psychiatric initiative of former psychiatry inmates. The Psychiatrie-Beschwerdezentrum e. V. (center for psychiatry complaints) is an organization that offers advisory service, accepts complaints and connects people with laywers. The meeting center is named after Werner Fuß, an important member and co-founder of the Irren-Offensive. Only with 34 years Werner was freed from paternalism and he later referred to himself as "king of breaking out of psychiatries". "The Verdict of the Foucault Tribunal" (1998), from Hagai Aviel, Chairperson of Isreali Association Against Psychiatric Assault. The Irren-Offensive is co-organizer of the "Foucault-Tribunal" together with Freie Universität, Berlin and Volksbühne, Berlin, where the four-day seminar on the state of psychiatry took place in 1998. "Prosecutors" were Thomas S. Szasz, Gerburg Treusch-Dieter, Wolf-Dieter Narr and others. ============================================================================== Weglaufhaus #D# Weglaufhaus: Das Weglaufhaus in Berlin-Frohnau »Villa Stöckle« ist ein antipsychiatrisch orientiertes Wohnprojekt, das wohungslosen oder akut von Wohnungslosigkeit bedrohten psychiatriebetroffenen Menschen die Möglichkeit bietet, sich dem psychiatrischen System zu entziehen und ihr Leben wieder in die eigenen Hände zu nehmen. Träger und Initiator des Projekts ist der Verein zum Schutz vor psychiatrischer Gewalt e.V.. Seit 1982 engagierte sich die Sozialpädagogin und mehrmalige "Psychatrie-Insassin" Tina Stöckle für die Idee des Weglaufhauses. Ihr zu Ehren trägt das Weglaufhaus den Namen »Villa Stöckle«. In ihrem Film "Fluchtpunkt: Wirklichkeit" (1999) begleitet die Dokumentarfilmerin Christine Mast die Bewohner des "Weglaufhaus" über einen längeren Zeitraum bei ihrer gemeinsamen Alltagsroutine, beim Kochen, Putzen und Einkaufen. Dabei führt sie zahlreiche Gespräche mit Bewohnern und Mitarbeitern des Hauses. #ENG# Weglaufhaus: Das Weglaufhaus (run-away house) in Berlin-Frohnau, at "Villa Stöckle", is a anti-psychiatric oriented living-project. It gives homeless and people threatened to lose their homes, who are psychiatry-affected, the possibility to leave the psychatric system and to take their lives into their own hands again. Operator and Initiator of the project is the Verein zum Schutz vor psychiatrischer Gewalt e.V. (organization for protection from psychiatric violence). Since 1982 social-pedagogue Tina Stöckle engaged herself for the idea of the Weglaufhaus. To honor her the house in Berlin was named "Villa Stöckle". In the documentary film "Fluchtpunkt: Wirklichkeit" (vanishing point: reality) filmmaker Christine Mast accompanies the residents of the Weglaufhaus during their daily activities of cooking, cleaning, shopping and approaches their lives in several conversations with residents and staff members. ============================================================================= ------------------------------ # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net